Word: poleã
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...friends are going to complain every time you beg them to come visit you. Nevertheless, the distance is over-exaggerated (it's a tad closer to the Science Center than Mather House is) by whiny Harvard students. The perception of Pfoho as literally “in the North Pole?? and the lack of Harvard buildings on Garden Street make the House seem mentally farther away than its equidistant River counterparts. But despite the Quad's perceived isolation, some appreciate the separation of class and home, nearby Fresh Pond, and large selection of new restaurants and stores...
...flags, shouted the Alaskan state anthem, and showed off their “nude beaver dancing.” Klub member and Crimson photographer Corey M. Rennell ’07-’08, who is currently on leave, led the traditional “jog to the Pole?? up and down the riverbank to warm up participants before taking the dip. This year, most swimmers opted to enter the icy waters from the bank of the river, although a few renegades did leap from the Weeks Memorial Footbridge. Three-year Polar Bear veteran Jason B. Munster...
...after walking Klimkiewicz to load the bases, Doyle caught captain Schuyler Mann—who had just launched a ball to the right of the right field foul pole??looking at strike three. Designated hitter Frank Herrmann went down swinging for the final...
After the play, a frustrated Woodson threw his broken stick on to the field, and did not seem to appreciate Stenmark’s kind gesture when he handed Woodson his broken shaft, who ripped it out of the Crimson long-pole??s hand...
...example, used the phallus liberally. In Aristophanes’ comedy “Acharnians,” the protagonist Dikaiopolis holds a religious procession with a model phallus and sings a bawdy song called the phallikon in Greek. He instructs his slave to hold a “phallus-pole?? up stiff and straight and sings an ode to the “midnight rambler and carouser.” The phallus procession was a celebration of a peace treaty that Dikaiopolis had personally arranged with the enemy Spartans. In “Lysistrata,” another...
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